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The Rink

The Rink (1916)

December. 04,1916
|
7
|
G
| Comedy

After amusements working in a restaurant, Charlie uses his lunch break to go roller skating.

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Reviews

ChanFamous
1916/12/04

I wanted to like it more than I actually did... But much of the humor totally escaped me and I walked out only mildly impressed.

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Kaydan Christian
1916/12/05

A terrific literary drama and character piece that shows how the process of creating art can be seen differently by those doing it and those looking at it from the outside.

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Zlatica
1916/12/06

One of the worst ways to make a cult movie is to set out to make a cult movie.

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Guillelmina
1916/12/07

The film's masterful storytelling did its job. The message was clear. No need to overdo.

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alexanderdavies-99382
1916/12/08

A lot of Charlie Chaplin comedies are overdone with pathos and sentiment. He seemed to think that his public should constantly be reminded of poverty and deprivation in his films. This grows irksome rather quickly and his legacy has been affected. Fortunately, his short films still contain his best work overall. "The Rink" is one of them as there is no pathos, just comedy. Chaplin plays a waiter who after causing utter chaos at the restaurant, does the same at a local roller skating rink. We have Chaplin's usual cast of actors: Edna Purviance, Eric Campbell, Henry Bergen and Albert Austin. The slapstick takes place at the restaurant and roller skating rink and it is excellent. Chaplin uses the various props to the best of his advantage. A masterpiece!

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Robert J. Maxwell
1916/12/09

Chaplin was almost always amusing but it occurred to me while watching this story of a waiter who woos a girl at a skating rink that in his earlier films he was more often the perp than the vic.This was released in 1916 and Chaplin is a rude waiter who humiliates guests and steals money. If a stranger happens to be bending over and fastening a lady's roller skate, Chaplin can't help giving him a swift kick in the pants when he passes by. There's nothing here about "the little people." If the tramp is little, it's because that's his most comfortable social niche.Ten years later, in "The Gold Rush," Chaplin had introduced humanity into his character, an innocent who is more sinned against than sinning.Ten years after "The Gold Rush", he was sending social messages about worker alienation. (That's what happens when your work permits you to take no pride in having done it well. Anyone up for McDonald's Chicken Nuggets?) But in movies like "Modern Times," the milieu is only a peg from which to hang gags that are more hilarious than ever. And movies about poverty in 1936 were hardly uncommon anyway.The gags here are sometimes spectacular, and always speedy. The tramp could certainly skate well.

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sbibb1
1916/12/10

This film is laugh out loud funny. Who knew Charlie Chaplin was so graceful (and funny) on roller skates? This short film is watchable by all ages, and despite being close to 90 years old, it is still downright funny. Lookout for a character called Mrs. Stout played by a man in drag.

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Kieran Kenney
1916/12/11

A well made comedy from Charlie Chaplin has some very good moments. Yet, I can't say I'm a big fan of the grotesque-type supporting players or Chaplin's jerky, knock-around body language. This film works best as a record of the period, but as a piece of entertainment, it's also not too bad.

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